Niflumic Acid Reverses Airway Mucus Excess and Improves Survival in the Rat Model of Steroid-Induced Pneumocystis Pneumonia

Although the role of adaptive immunity in fighting Pneumocystis infection is well known, the role of the innate, airway epithelium, responses remains largely unexplored. The concerted interaction of innate and adaptive responses is essential to successfully eradicate infection. Increased expression...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Francisco J. Pérez, Pablo A. Iturra, Carolina A. Ponce, Fabien Magne, Víctor Garcia-Angulo, Sergio L. Vargas
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2019-07-01
Series:Frontiers in Microbiology
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fmicb.2019.01522/full
id doaj-37090c4042674d5eaf0f781268fba97c
record_format Article
spelling doaj-37090c4042674d5eaf0f781268fba97c2020-11-24T21:32:49ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Microbiology1664-302X2019-07-011010.3389/fmicb.2019.01522472839Niflumic Acid Reverses Airway Mucus Excess and Improves Survival in the Rat Model of Steroid-Induced Pneumocystis PneumoniaFrancisco J. PérezPablo A. IturraCarolina A. PonceFabien MagneVíctor Garcia-AnguloSergio L. VargasAlthough the role of adaptive immunity in fighting Pneumocystis infection is well known, the role of the innate, airway epithelium, responses remains largely unexplored. The concerted interaction of innate and adaptive responses is essential to successfully eradicate infection. Increased expression of goblet-cell-derived CLCA1 protein plus excess mucus in infant autopsy lungs and in murine models of primary Pneumocystis infection alert of innate immune system immunopathology associated to Pneumocystis infection. Nonetheless, whether blocking mucus-associated innate immune pathways decreases Pneumocystis-related immunopathology is unknown. Furthermore, current treatment of Pneumocystis pneumonia (PcP) relying on anti-Pneumocystis drugs plus steroids is not ideal because removes cellular immune responses against the fungal pathogen. In this study, we used the steroid-induced rat model of PcP to evaluate inflammation and mucus progression, and tested the effect of niflumic acid (NFA), a fenamate-type drug with potent CLCA1 blocker activity, in decreasing Pneumocystis-associated immunopathology. In this model, animals acquire Pneumocystis spontaneously and pneumonia develops owing to the steroids-induced immunodeficiency. Steroids led to decreased animal weight evidencing severe immunosuppression and to significant Pneumocystis-associated pulmonary edema as evidenced by wet-to-dry lung ratios that doubled those of uninfected animals. Inflammatory cuffing infiltrates were noticed first around lung blood vessels followed by bronchi, and both increased progressively. Similarly, airway epithelial and lumen mucus progressively increased. This occurred in parallel to increasing levels of MUC5AC and mCLCA3, the murine homolog of hCLCA1. Administration of NFA caused a significant decrease in total mucus, MUC5AC and mCLCA3 and also, in Pneumocystis-associated inflammation. Most relevant, NFA treatment improved survival at 8 weeks of steroids. Results suggest an important role of innate immune responses in immunopathology of steroid-induced PcP. They warrant evaluation of CLCA1 blockers as adjunctive therapy in this condition and describe a simple model to evaluate therapeutic interventions for steroid resistant mucus, a common condition in patients with chronic lung disease like asthma, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) and cystic fibrosis.https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fmicb.2019.01522/fullPneumocystis pneumoniasteroid-resistant-mucusanimal modelmucusInnate ImmunityCLCA1
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Francisco J. Pérez
Pablo A. Iturra
Carolina A. Ponce
Fabien Magne
Víctor Garcia-Angulo
Sergio L. Vargas
spellingShingle Francisco J. Pérez
Pablo A. Iturra
Carolina A. Ponce
Fabien Magne
Víctor Garcia-Angulo
Sergio L. Vargas
Niflumic Acid Reverses Airway Mucus Excess and Improves Survival in the Rat Model of Steroid-Induced Pneumocystis Pneumonia
Frontiers in Microbiology
Pneumocystis pneumonia
steroid-resistant-mucus
animal model
mucus
Innate Immunity
CLCA1
author_facet Francisco J. Pérez
Pablo A. Iturra
Carolina A. Ponce
Fabien Magne
Víctor Garcia-Angulo
Sergio L. Vargas
author_sort Francisco J. Pérez
title Niflumic Acid Reverses Airway Mucus Excess and Improves Survival in the Rat Model of Steroid-Induced Pneumocystis Pneumonia
title_short Niflumic Acid Reverses Airway Mucus Excess and Improves Survival in the Rat Model of Steroid-Induced Pneumocystis Pneumonia
title_full Niflumic Acid Reverses Airway Mucus Excess and Improves Survival in the Rat Model of Steroid-Induced Pneumocystis Pneumonia
title_fullStr Niflumic Acid Reverses Airway Mucus Excess and Improves Survival in the Rat Model of Steroid-Induced Pneumocystis Pneumonia
title_full_unstemmed Niflumic Acid Reverses Airway Mucus Excess and Improves Survival in the Rat Model of Steroid-Induced Pneumocystis Pneumonia
title_sort niflumic acid reverses airway mucus excess and improves survival in the rat model of steroid-induced pneumocystis pneumonia
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Microbiology
issn 1664-302X
publishDate 2019-07-01
description Although the role of adaptive immunity in fighting Pneumocystis infection is well known, the role of the innate, airway epithelium, responses remains largely unexplored. The concerted interaction of innate and adaptive responses is essential to successfully eradicate infection. Increased expression of goblet-cell-derived CLCA1 protein plus excess mucus in infant autopsy lungs and in murine models of primary Pneumocystis infection alert of innate immune system immunopathology associated to Pneumocystis infection. Nonetheless, whether blocking mucus-associated innate immune pathways decreases Pneumocystis-related immunopathology is unknown. Furthermore, current treatment of Pneumocystis pneumonia (PcP) relying on anti-Pneumocystis drugs plus steroids is not ideal because removes cellular immune responses against the fungal pathogen. In this study, we used the steroid-induced rat model of PcP to evaluate inflammation and mucus progression, and tested the effect of niflumic acid (NFA), a fenamate-type drug with potent CLCA1 blocker activity, in decreasing Pneumocystis-associated immunopathology. In this model, animals acquire Pneumocystis spontaneously and pneumonia develops owing to the steroids-induced immunodeficiency. Steroids led to decreased animal weight evidencing severe immunosuppression and to significant Pneumocystis-associated pulmonary edema as evidenced by wet-to-dry lung ratios that doubled those of uninfected animals. Inflammatory cuffing infiltrates were noticed first around lung blood vessels followed by bronchi, and both increased progressively. Similarly, airway epithelial and lumen mucus progressively increased. This occurred in parallel to increasing levels of MUC5AC and mCLCA3, the murine homolog of hCLCA1. Administration of NFA caused a significant decrease in total mucus, MUC5AC and mCLCA3 and also, in Pneumocystis-associated inflammation. Most relevant, NFA treatment improved survival at 8 weeks of steroids. Results suggest an important role of innate immune responses in immunopathology of steroid-induced PcP. They warrant evaluation of CLCA1 blockers as adjunctive therapy in this condition and describe a simple model to evaluate therapeutic interventions for steroid resistant mucus, a common condition in patients with chronic lung disease like asthma, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) and cystic fibrosis.
topic Pneumocystis pneumonia
steroid-resistant-mucus
animal model
mucus
Innate Immunity
CLCA1
url https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fmicb.2019.01522/full
work_keys_str_mv AT franciscojperez niflumicacidreversesairwaymucusexcessandimprovessurvivalintheratmodelofsteroidinducedpneumocystispneumonia
AT pabloaiturra niflumicacidreversesairwaymucusexcessandimprovessurvivalintheratmodelofsteroidinducedpneumocystispneumonia
AT carolinaaponce niflumicacidreversesairwaymucusexcessandimprovessurvivalintheratmodelofsteroidinducedpneumocystispneumonia
AT fabienmagne niflumicacidreversesairwaymucusexcessandimprovessurvivalintheratmodelofsteroidinducedpneumocystispneumonia
AT victorgarciaangulo niflumicacidreversesairwaymucusexcessandimprovessurvivalintheratmodelofsteroidinducedpneumocystispneumonia
AT sergiolvargas niflumicacidreversesairwaymucusexcessandimprovessurvivalintheratmodelofsteroidinducedpneumocystispneumonia
_version_ 1725955677931700224